Benedict Cumberbatch: Cats ‘just wander around looking really unimpressed’

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Benedict Cumberbatch covers one of W Magazine’s Best Performances covers, and W actually gave him one of the longest interviews. I wonder if that was even their choice! Benedict does go on and on, he will truly talk anyone’s ear off. Bendy is here because of The Power of the Dog, a truly excellent movie, and The Electrical Life of Louis Wain (which I still haven’t seen). You can read the full piece here. He talks about cats! Some highlights:

Being an only child, playing a man with a brother in Power: “It’s very weird, not having had a brother, to manifest that, but at the same time, the dynamic of their relationship is so specifically about two diametrically opposed human beings who are lumped together, and it’s an odd-couple friendship relationship. The filial part of it was something that had to be filled in. Jane was brilliant. She had us do crazy exercises of proximity, like waltzing together so that we could hold each other, smell each other, be very close to each other’s bodies as we would’ve done in a very visceral way as brothers for all of our lives. And these are two men who slept in the same room, until [Phil’s brother] George finds love and goes next door to the parents’ bedroom with Rose. It’s very Freudian. You’d want Jesse [Plemons] as a brother. Phil’s a mean bitch to him; he’s just vile.

How he got involved in Power: “I heard that Jane Campion wanted to meet. I heard what the project was called. I read the book, I read the script, and then I met her. I was always going to say yes, no matter what the ask was, to be frank. I just think she’s truly a living icon, an extraordinary filmmaker, and I was less concerned or aware that it was her first film in 11 years or her first male protagonist. That didn’t matter to me. I just wanted to work with her.

Playing the first male protagonist in Jane Campion’s oeuvre: “I think it’s so important that she’s the one who tells this story. It started in that first conversation, the sensuality she wanted to crack open in this very macho, toxic masculine world. The layers of delicacy to this complex character that she wanted to reveal. How she wanted to do that, how she wanted to signify it as a very visually orientated, sensually oriented filmmaker, through her lens and her idea of that era and what subverts type and stereotype, and archetype most importantly, was fascinating.

Learning new skills: “I think it was integral to convince and authenticate how lived an experience it was for him to do that, to manage the animals, the men, the land, the weather, the braiding, the cigarette rolling, the whittling. I never quite mastered the one-hand cigarette rolling. It’s harder than most people think. It’s pretty damn hard to do it as it’s described in the book; it’s fine to roll a really big fat doobie that falls apart in your first take and gets in your mouth and burns a hole in your chaps. That’s great, and I did that lots, for real. But he’s described as rolling rail thin, tight cigarettes. Everything about him is controlled and buttoned up, but also with great dexterity, as well as strength.

Working with cats in The Electrical Life of Louis Wain: “Cats are harder to herd than cattle, I’ll tell you that much.”

Whether he’s ever had cats: “No, I’ve had my grandmother’s and friend’s, but never my own. I was an only child who went to boarding school. It’s time to start playing the smallest violin in the world for me right now. I was very lucky because I had other people’s pets. I was like an uncle or godparent. You get all the benefits without any of the trauma. We had animals at school that we tended to, I don’t know how they survived. I didn’t go through the trauma of seeing them as babies and then going through their life cycle with them and the inevitable end. I love, love, love, love, love dogs. Cats, on the other hand… Don’t ever do a film with them. They just wander around looking really unimpressed with everything. I love them, but working with them is really tough.

[From W Magazine]

I love cats but I would never want to “work” with them in any sense. Like, cats don’t care about hitting a mark. Cats don’t care about schedules or lighting or unions. Cats have their own kitty unions and they have mob hours. I can’t even imagine what it was like for Bendy to work with lots of cats. I bet they loved him though? He seems like he has the kind of energy cats would love. But alas, he claims he’s a dog person. As for what he says about The Power of the Dog… he’s very proud of the film, as he should be. His performance was great too. He’s probably going to get another Oscar nomination.

Benedict Cumberbatch attends the red carpet of the movie 'The Power of the Dog' during the 78th Venice International Film Festival

Cover courtesy of W Magazine, additional photos courtesy of Avalon Red.

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32 Responses to “Benedict Cumberbatch: Cats ‘just wander around looking really unimpressed’”

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  1. Snuffles says:

    Welcome to cats, Benedict. I WISH my cat simply walked around unimpressed. My 7 month old is a little psycho who regularly overestimates her agility. She regularly perches on the edge of a chair then tries to simultaneously chase her tail in speedy circles and is shocked as she inevitably loses her balance and wildly grasps onto the chair as it tips over.

    I’m still waiting for her to learn that she doesn’t have Circ de Soleil acrobatic abilities and to stop treating my house like a parkor course.

    • Gutterflower says:

      Mine too! My cat is the least agile, least graceful animal I have come across. Last year he broke his leg even. He’s always racing around and bouncing off things. He ran full tilt into a closet door once when he had the zoomies.

      • Snuffles says:

        @gutterflower

        I’m terrified mine will break something too! I spent the first 2 weeks kitten proofing my house. I have aluminum foil on every ledge to try and prevent that.

      • lucy2 says:

        I have 2 siblings. The girl is graceful, agile, and totally cat like. The boy is like a hurricane of destruction, crashes into everything, broke so many things, no idea of his actual size, knocks things over constantly.

    • Brandy Alexander says:

      When my cat was around that age, she fell of the the banister of my stairs all the time. From the second floor to the first. It’s a miracle she didn’t break anything. I used to say she was a dog in cat suit. She learned though because she just turned 2 and she’s a ninja now.

      • JWOOLMAN says:

        I remember the night the vet dropped off a little kitten (will call her Attila the Calico for privacy and descriptiveness) after she passed tests for deadlies that could affect her future foster mom and mentor (a bored 10 year old cat who had lost her sister a couple of months before). Attila had followed a friend around on his mail route and was impossible to get rid of, so of course he brought her to me.

        I had been trying to kitten-proof the top area of the staircase by putting shields up so she wouldn’t fall downstairs from the open side bannisters. Of course, tiny Attila hopped up the stairs, step by step, and immediately bypassed the shields and — fell down the stairs. I thought, great, I brought my cat a brain-damaged kitten for company. But she was actually ok and only slowed down for a few minutes.

        Bast looks out for the young and stupid.

    • Jaded says:

      Well Snuffles, my Smitty is about to turn 4 and he’s still basically a 15 lb kitten with intermittent zoomies, usually at 3:00 in the morning. He’s half Maine Coon and their personalities are like huge toddlers until they’re at least 4 years old. We actually had to give him cat tranquilizers at night up until he was about 1-1/2 years old he was such a fecking maniac. He’s calmed down a lot in the past year but we’re still waiting for him to ditch the middle of the night foot slaps and chasing invisible bugs.

      • AlpineWitch says:

        My Maine Coon boy is 8 this year and he still thinks he is a kitten 🤣🤣

  2. Lizzie Bathory says:

    I love dogs but don’t think I could manage having one (unless it was like an ancient golden retriever I once met who was basically a furry footstool). I’ve always had cats, but yes, they generally do wander around looking unimpressed.

    When my in-laws had to pet-sit, I explained that our 2 cats are basically like roommates that expect you to feed them & clean up after them. And they will sit on you when they feel like it.

  3. Driver8 says:

    I loved POD. It was a slow burn for me, but I thought he was excellent. It was nice to see some Bendy cock as well. He has a great body! My bff used to be able to roll a joint one handed while driving. It’s an art form I still marvel at. Also, cats are awesome.

  4. Eurydice says:

    I once read an interview with a cat wrangler who said that, unlike dogs who want to please humans, cats have to be convinced that what you want them to do will be fun. As for cats not looking impressed, I’ve never seen a dog look impressed, either – unless he means “impressed by him” as in “I’m so happy to see you for no particular reason.”

    • JWOOLMAN says:

      Imagine the cat wrangler for the movie Keanu. The kitten Keanu was played by a passel of kittens with similar coloring… They all did quite well, I think. If I remember correctly, they were all up for adoption and had no trouble at all finding happy homes at the end of filming.

  5. Cel2495 says:

    Dog lover here… not sure I will ever have a cat. My mom has one , and I swear she is like a dog at times. She is always needing attention and follows my mom everywhere 😆

    • ArtHistorian says:

      I know cats that love to play fetch!

      • SarahCS says:

        I tried that but apparently you can’s always teach an old cat new tricks. I ended up posting all his crinkle balls to my friends cats on his behalf. They love them and play fetch with them!

      • Jan90067 says:

        My cats LOVED playing fetch, esp. with my hair scrunchies lol My boy cat also loved being taken on walks outside with a harness leash on (though he never could quite understand *why* the birds didn’t want to play! lol).

        My boy would also lay over my keyboard if he felt he wasn’t getting enough attention. And if I still didn’t stop and belly rub, he’d take his paw, and turn my face toward him. He stare for a minute, lay down again, belly up and then look at me again. It was the funniest thing! 😊 I miss my little guy.

      • Jan90067 says:

        My cats LOVED playing fetch, esp. with my hair scrunchies lol They came when you whistled or called their names as well. My boy cat also loved being taken on walks outside with a harness leash on (though he never could quite understand *why* the birds didn’t want to play! lol).

        My boy would also lay over my keyboard if he felt he wasn’t getting enough attention. And if I still didn’t stop and belly rub, he’d take his paw, and turn my face toward him. He stare for a minute, lay down again, belly up and then look at me again. It was the funniest thing! 😊 I miss my little guy.

      • Zan says:

        My current cat overlord plays fetch (including dropping the ball back in my hand), follows commands (to sit, and get into his carrier), and will come when called. He is a cat-dog and pretty much the coolest dude ever.

    • SarahCS says:

      The cat who now lives here was with my grandmother for his first eight years and she’d only ever had dogs – until the last one passed and my aunt decided she needed something in the house and got her the cat. She treated him like a dog and he effectively learnt how to behave like one! It probably helped that he’s super needy and affectionate and if he’s awake he will come running when you get home. He’s a noisy delight.

  6. Lala11_7 says:

    I’ve been a Campion stan since I sat in the theater opening weekend to see her first independent release… “Sweetie”…I LOVE how she writes & film the female experience…so being able to see POD…opening weekend…in the security of my home…WAS ONE OF THE BEST GIFTS! I watched it 4x that first weekend and got the book from the library & INHALED it in 1 day…and read it 3xs in the 2 weeks that I was able to keep it…had a FIT that I couldn’t keep it longer…but the my Goddaughter sent me a surprise Amazon package…and there it was! I ADORE this movie…and I’m on track to read EVERYTHING that Thomas Savage wrote because he is a MAGNIFICENT author…

    Jane is a gift that keeps on giving❣

  7. MerlinsMom1018 says:

    Cat Mom here. I grew up having both dogs and cats. I love love love dogs and would never turn one away but my hearts true passion is cats.
    We are owned (currently) by a Snowshoe Siamese and let me just say he rules this roost. Even the husband (who prefers dogs hands down) bows down to Merlin.
    and I second Cumberbatch’s take. I have never seen a cat who can look less impressed than mine

  8. Talita says:

    Men not liking cats is a red flag for me.

  9. Merricat says:

    Lol, I have dogs AND cats. It is wonderful, but I spend a lot of time vacuuming the fur.

  10. Ameerah says:

    Benedict isn’t an only. He had a sister who passed away from cancer in 2020. He talked about her in his speech when he receive his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame last week.

  11. Cobra says:

    I loved ‘Top of the lake’ especially the first season. I mainly watched for Elisabeth Moss, dint pay too much attention to the director/writer. Have to check out some of her other stuff. liked ‘Power of the dog’, I have to rewatch it. Watched only one time with captions on, sure I missed lot of nuances. I watched ‘in the cut’ when I was bingeing on Mark Ruffalo stuff. Remember liking it as well.
    No ‘power of the dog’ ebook in my library, have to find a hardcopy.

  12. KG says:

    Kitty unions is the best phrase you’ve written thus far, Kaiser. May it enter the lexicon.

  13. Deering24 says:

    Hee. Spoken like a man who has never worked with parrots. 🤣😈😎

  14. Christine says:

    “Thom Yorke came one night, and I was terrible. It was like a high school prom, where I couldn’t pluck up the courage to give him a kiss.”

    *sigh*

    Benedict Cumberbatch is dreamy. That is all I have to say.

  15. Lisa says:

    It’s funny to me that every female lead in a Jane Campion film goes thru hell with her and yet Bendy has an easy ride. Hmmm

    • Jaded says:

      I’ve read nothing but positive comments from women who have acted in her films – Kristen Stewart, Nicole Kidman, Kerry Fox, Holly Hunter just to name a few. Hmmmm back at you for making such a baseless allegation.

  16. StubbornA says:

    I’ve always found that men who don’t like cats are the same ones who don’t understand consent.

    And cats are the best. My fiancé was immediately loved on by my now departed ragdoll cat of 22 years. She even approved my engagement ring before she passed on. I miss that cat every day.

  17. L says:

    My 15 year old and my 4 year old cats both look at me like I hung the stars and they can’t believe I deign to live with them. My 14 year old did as well, and actually needed to be next to me, preferably with one paw on me at all times, before he went missing 🙁
    We’ve all heard the joke about aloof cats, but each cat is unique. Most of mine have been stage 5 clingers.